5 Best-paying Jobs

Statistics would tell you that it's a good time to be a medical professional -- the top-nine best-paid jobs fall into medical fields. But who's No. 1?

Anesthesiologist Rondall Lane sedates a man before an operation.
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Anesthesiologist Rondall Lane (left) sedates a man before an operation in 2005.

They're the men and women who numb us, sedate us and put us under during unpleasant procedures involving the opening, internal repairing and sealing of our bodies. They are anesthesiologists. So what do they do that earns them so much green?

Although not considered a distinct profession until the 1930s, anesthetists have been around since the 1800s. Anesthetic technology has expanded from general anesthesia, which passes through the entire body to lower the patient into unconsciousness, to local and regional anesthetics. Local anesthetics target very specific areas, such as your gums for dental surgery or the area around a cut that needs stitching. Regional anesthesia targets an area of the body, like your leg or arm. Sedation, which consists of relaxing the patient until she is on the edge of or cradled in the hands of sleep, also falls in the jurisdiction of the anesthesiologist.

Before a surgical procedure, an anesthesiologist will conduct an interview with the patient. In addition to asking about your general health, the medications you're taking, any allergies you might have, and whether you drink or smoke, the anesthesiologist will inquire whether you or any members of your family have had bad reactions to anesthesia in the past. This interview helps the anesthesiologist to choose the anesthesia that's right for your physiology.

Squeaking in at No.10
Chief Executive Officers, with an average annual income of $144,600, are the only nonmedical professionals in the top 10. They are the tenth highest-paid professionals in the United States. As the captain of a corporation, the CEO meets with a board of directors, executes the board's wishes, and, essentially, steers the company on its course.


During surgery, the anesthesiologist keeps a close eye on your vital signs, including your breathing, heart rate and blood pressure. The anesthesiologist's vigilance during surgery is important, because strong anesthesia greatly reduces or eliminates your body's ability to operate vital systems. This is why you always see a breathing tube in a patient's mouth during major surgery on television. After surgery, your anesthesiologist will continue to keep an eye on you as you recover in the hospital.

Anesthesiologists' comfortable salary, a national average of $184,340 in the United States, allows them to pay off the massive bills they incurred while attending undergraduate college and medical school, not to mention their internship and three-year residency. And, considering that anesthesiologists keep us alive and prevent us from feeling those nasty, sharp surgical tools, their salary seems justified.

Who else is at the top of the list?
Gynecologists, obstetricians, orthodontists, oral surgeons, psychiatrists and general practitioners all make the top-10 list of highest-paid jobs. Here are a few you might not expect: a close associate of the No. 14 airline pilot is the No. 17 air-traffic controller, who makes an average $110,270 per year. Information and computer systems managers, who make an average $107,250 per annum, come in at a respectable No. 22, while financial managers squeak in at No. 25, with an average annual income of $101,450, certainly nothing to balk at.

What about the worst-paying jobs today? Check them out on the next page.

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